Every Lane. Honestly Compared.
ACA marketplace plans, employer coverage, and private PPO plans — I look at all three and tell you which one actually fits your situation in Nashville, Franklin, Murfreesboro, and across Middle Tennessee.
We specialize in private PPO health plans and supplemental coverage for self-employed individuals, 1099 contractors, and small business owners across Middle Tennessee. From dental and vision to critical illness and term life, we build coverage bundles that work the way employer plans do — without requiring an employer.
These are medically underwritten plans with real major medical benefits, nationwide PPO access, no referrals needed, and in many cases significantly lower premiums than ACA alternatives for healthy individuals.
Key difference: These plans are underwritten — meaning you qualify based on your health history. Healthy individuals often see their best coverage-to-cost ratio here. Pre-existing conditions may affect eligibility.
No regional network restrictions. If you travel, work across state lines, or just want to see any doctor you choose — this is how you get that.
No open enrollment window required. If you're self-employed or lose coverage, you can get into a private plan year-round.
See a specialist directly. No gatekeeper. No waiting for a primary care approval before you can get the care you actually need.
Medically underwritten. Nationwide access. Real major medical benefits.
ACA marketplace plans can be an excellent option — but it depends heavily on your income and household situation. If your income falls within a range that qualifies for significant subsidies, the math can work in your favor. If it doesn't, you're often paying full price for a plan with real limitations.
The coverage is solid. Pre-existing conditions are covered, no underwriting required. But the network restrictions, referral requirements, and regional limitations matter more than people realize — especially if you travel or have specific providers you want to keep.
The honest take: ACA works well at certain income levels. Above the subsidy threshold? You're often overpaying for coverage that's more restricted than private market alternatives. Let's run the numbers and see where you actually stand.
If your income qualifies, subsidies can dramatically reduce your monthly premium. This is where ACA plans are genuinely competitive.
No medical underwriting. If you have ongoing conditions that would disqualify you from private plans, ACA marketplace is worth a serious look.
You can only enroll during open enrollment or a qualifying life event — which limits flexibility for the self-employed who need coverage year-round.
Income-driven subsidies. No underwriting. But know the limitations before you assume it's your best option.
A lot of people default to their employer plan because it feels like the "safe" or "included" option. But employer plans vary enormously in quality and total cost — and sometimes a private market plan is substantially more affordable once you factor in payroll deductions, deductibles, and network restrictions.
I'll help you run the real comparison: what you're paying in premiums vs. what you'd pay privately, what the network actually covers, and whether your current plan actually protects you the way you think it does.
What people don't realize: Your employer plan is only "free" up to what they contribute. You're still paying for the rest — and that cost is often higher than people assume when compared directly to private options.
We look at your actual out-of-pocket cost — not just the premium. Deductibles, copays, and max out-of-pocket all go into the real number.
Can you keep your current doctors? Are you restricted to a EPO? Do you need referrals? These questions matter more than the monthly premium.
It might be the right call. But let's actually verify that before you assume.
This is a general comparison. Your specific situation will change the math. That's why we talk first.
| Feature | ⭐ Private Market PPO | ACA Marketplace | Employer Plan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Network Type | ✓ Nationwide PPO | ~ Regional (varies) | ~ Varies by plan |
| Referrals Required | ✓ No referrals needed | ✗ Often required (EPO) | ~ Depends on plan type |
| Year-Round Enrollment | ✓ Enroll any time | ✗ Open enrollment only | ✗ Annual window only |
| Pre-Existing Conditions | ~ Underwriting applies | ✓ Fully covered | ✓ Fully covered |
| Income-Based Subsidies | ✗ Not available | ✓ If income qualifies | ✗ Not applicable |
| Premium Cost (Healthy Adults) | ✓ Often lower | ~ High without subsidies | ~ Varies by employer |
| Travel & Multi-State Use | ✓ Works nationwide | ✗ Regional restrictions | ~ Depends on network |
| Best For | Self-employed, 1099, higher-income, healthy individuals | Lower income, pre-existing conditions, subsidy-eligible | Those with strong employer contributions |
Important: This table shows general patterns — not guarantees. Coverage, premiums, and eligibility vary by individual health history, income, location, and plan selection. I always review your specific situation before making any recommendation.
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That's exactly what the conversation is for. 15 minutes. Honest answers. No pressure.